112 Wis. 29 | Wis. | 1901
The circumstances of plaintiff’s injury are established wholly by his OAvn testimony and statements. He was hunting, with two companions, who were on the other side of a fence and not in sight of him. Desiring to join
The force and effect of the clause in the policy excepting the defendant from liability for injuries due to unnecessary exposure to danger has received authoritative construction in this court in Shevlin v. Am. M. A. Asso. 94 Wis. 180, where it is held to be satisfied by the same acts that would constitute contributory negligence, and a distinction is drawn between the expression present in this policy and the expression a “ voluntary or wilful exposure to unnecessary danger,” the latter being construed to describe gross negligence, in the sense of a conscious exposure to a known peril. Applying the law of this case to the facts disclosed by the plaintiff’s own uncontradicted and unqualified description of the event, there is no room for difference of opinion as to what transpired, nor for different inferences therefrom as to the existence of that negligence which constitutes an unnecessary exposure to danger. From the accident itself there can, of course, be no doubt that plaintiff placed his wrist in front of the muzzle of his gun, loaded and cocked, as- he reached for it to draw it towards him through the fence. This was, of course, unnecessary. It is always possible, if one must draw a loaded gun through a fence, to re
Other questions passed upon by the court below and argued before us are by the foregoing conclusion rendered wholly immaterial. Judgment for the defendant necessarily results from the foregoing change in the findings.
By the Gov/rt. — Judgment reversed, and cause remanded with directions to render judgment for the defendant.